The Courier News from Blytheville, Arkansas · Page 12

Page 12 article text (OCR)

PAGE
TWELVE
BI/Y'fJIKVILLK
(ARK.)'
COURIER
NEWS
UgalCodeUrged
For
All
Nations
Toft,
in
California
to
•Feel
Political
Pulse,
Would
End
UN
Vetoes
LOS
ANGELES,
Sspt.
16.
(UP)
—
S«n.
Robert
A.
Taft,
R.,
Ohio,
called
today
for
development
of
a
*codc
of
international
law
looking
toward
eventual
elimination
of
the
United
Nations
veto.
He
made
the
proiwsal
at
a
news
conference
licie
shortly
after,
his
arrival
from
Santa
Cruz
where
he
began
p.
six-state
lour
to
test
his
chances
lor
the
Republican
presidential
nomination.
Taft
was
asked
whether
he
agreed
.with
Secretary
of
State
George
C.
Marshall's
appeal
at
New
York
Sim-
day
for
the
UN
General
Assembly
to
do
something
about
aggression
against
Greece.
•
The
senator
replied
that
he
ngrccd
with
the
"general
principle"
bu
1
,
that
he
did
not
know
the
facts.
••Whether
the
United
Nations
can
do
anything
is
another
question,"
lie
added.
.
TaTt
said
he
had
consistently
criticized
the
UN
charier
because
it
gave
the
Security
Council
power
to
preserve
"peace
and
security"
but
did
nothing
about
enforcing
"justice."
Up
said
he
believed
tluit
limitations
could
be
ylaceo.
upon
the
big
power
veto
but
thht
innny
charter
revisions
would
b_-
needed
before
the
.veto
could
be
abolished.
The
UN
cuuncll
is
not
a
judicial
body,
he
said,
and
lias
"no
relation
to
justice."
"International
ponce
has
to
be
based
on
justice
and
law."
Taft
said,
"and
we
must
let
si»nc
agency
Uc-
cidc
whether
there
is
a
violation
of
the
law.
it's
a
judicial
procedure."
rilKSDAY,
SKl'TICMHKU
10,
1917
INDONESIAN
REPUBLIC
TRIES
POWER
GRAB
fast
Indonesia,
Borneo
Charge
It
Tries
to
Boss
Other
States
In
U.
S.
of
Indonesia,
Already
Guaranteed
Independence
In
1949
Republic
(now
fighting)
J^JjJjj
The
United
Slates
of
Indonesia
is
to
consist
of
three
sl;ilcs,
cadi
shown
here
in
u
different
backgrouml.
ItrLtlsh
colonies
are
not
included
in
U.
S.
I.
Several
small
islands
off
Sumatra
and
Malaya
can
decide
later
with
which
slate,
if
any,
Ihey
wish
to
alflliatVk
Federation
will
have
an
area
of
735
CM}
square
miles—about
one-fourth
tliut
uf
coiiMni-nlat
V.
S.
A.—imcl
»
inipuiation
of
70,COO,000—about
half
that
of
the
U,
S.
A,
arc
involved
in
the
euri'tnl
fighting.
"*
Only
Sumatra
ant)
Java
(and
Hie
little
Island
of
[Minium,
not
shown)
"'ITic
HepublJc
insists
upon
in[;
Ijoss
over
alt
Indonesia,"
•Sullan
Miinm;tm?;l
their
HY
S,
BUKTON*
HEATH
NKA
Staff
CVirresporuU'tit
LAKE
SUCCESS,
N.
D.,
Sp])l.
3.
<NEA>
—Down
Sn
the
incllnn
Ocean,
|
"The
rc.st
of
its
want
equality
IHtlc
more
than
a
V-2'.s
f
light
"mrth
all
.slates
of
the
federation.
We:
of
Australia,
ft
new
(lcmo'.'ratic
11:1-
!
didn't
win
it
the
Dutch
to
run
us
ns
(ion
LS
being
born.
It
will
be
tlui
1
;\
colony,
mul
we
are
jusl
n.s
un-
Truman
Hears
Missouri's
Big
Guns
Roar
ABOARD
BATTLESHIP
MISSOURI,
Sept.
IS.
<UP)—Standing
on
nn
open
bridge,
President
Tru-
man'Monday
vvntchuil
the
big
10-inch
guns
of
the
Missouri
hurl
screaminc
rircjtretilcs
at
a
shadow
largct
more
than
seven
miles
away.
As
Mr.
Truman
watched,
the
three-gun
forward
turret
of
the
battleship
fired
five
salvos
toward
nn
1
oflsel
image
o^
the
accompanying
destroyer
Dyess.
Through
special
sighting
devices,
the
Buns
actually
were
trained
1.050
yards
to
the
right
of
the
Dycss.
From
his
point
of
vantage,
the
President
was
able
to
follow
the
track
of
the
2,700-pound
pro-
'jectilcs
to
the
target
area.
The
brief
war
games
marked
the
first
time
the
Missouri's
gun
had
been
unllmbcrcd
since
she
sailed
from
Rio
de
Janeiro
for
Norfolk,
Va..
where
she
Is
due
Friday.
The
Missouri—GOO
miles
East
by
North
from
St.
Thomas
—
is
nbout
1,060
miles
away
from
the
tropical
hurricane
sweeping
up
the
Atlantic.
If
the
storm
continues
its
present
course,
the
ship
probably
will
cross
its
wake
later
tliij
week
but
is
not
expected
to
encounter
anything
more
than
high
sefcs.
'
Mr.
Truman
and
his
family
gathered
aboard
the
Missouri's
[anlail
yesterday
to
attend
services
conducted
by
the
ship's
young
catholic
chaplain,
Cmdr.
Lawrence
R.
Schneider.
United
Stales
of
Indonesia,
and
a
broad
way
it
is
patterned
after
the
United
Slates
of
America.
II
is
easy
for
the
bitter
fighting
in
Java
ami
Sumatra
to
give
a
fii!?e
Impression
of
the
controversy
that
rases
among
the
Netherlands,
the
Itcpubtlc
nf
Indonesia
and
the
remainder
of
rntlone.sir..
The
Indonesians
nre
not
fighting
[or
independence.
The
Dutch
have
agreed
in
writing
that
Indonesia
shall
be
completely
independent
after
January
1.
1943.
The
broad
basis
of
a
United
Stales
of
Indone.-ii'i
—as
free
as
Ihe
United
States
of
America
-has
been
accepted
by
all
parties.
Why.
then,
are
Dutch
and
Indonesians
shooting
ciich
other
In
Java
nn
Sumatra
1
Why
i-re
Indonesian
officials—who
suy
frankly
that
they
"don'l
give
a
damn
what
the
Dulch
want,
niv.l
plca.se
quote
us
on
that"—here
to
argue
wilh
the
UN
against
Republic
of
Indonesia
clainis?
The
Security
Council
has
refused
to
listen
to
Sultan
Sjarif
Humid
Alkadrie
of
PoiitianKk,
hc.id
of
the
territoiy
o[
West
Borneo,
or
to
President
Sjckorde
Gdo
Itokc
Sock;uva-
ti.
or
Premier
Nadjaniiidin
Daeng
Malewa
or
Home
Minister
Klc
Annk
Agoeng
Gde
Agocng
ol
the
state
of
East
Indonesia.
What
they
wnnlcd
to
te!l
the
Council
was
what
they
told
me.
over
beer
and
iced
coffee,
It;
a
hotel
room
on
New
York's
Park
Avenue
while
here
at
Lake
Succesi
the
Cotmcirwas
tossing
the
Indonesian
problem
impolcntly
around.
to
hnvo
thm
Jlojniblic
hos.s
tike
.subordinates."
All
of
the
Indonesian
i
cprcM>n-
tiuivc.s
.speak
EtitflisU,
but
the
«-!
rear
Sullnn,
though
he
never
hii:;
studied
or
lived
in
an
.English
-
ccuntry,
(nlks
it
like
:'.ii
American,
For
tha;
reason
as
vull
,is
because
ol
liis
rank,
ho
en
mud
the
burden
of
the
conversation
though
Bust
Ziuioncstii
ts
both
inv
t
v
aud
more
populous
thi.ni
Wci.st
Borneo.
•It
is."
.said
the
SitUtnr,
"as
thon^i
New
York,
because
It
is
larger,
in-
sisu-d
on
bossing
Ihe
other
states
in
your
federation."
East.
Indonesia,
with
u
population
ol
somi;
1G
millions,
include.?
Biiii.
Timor,
Glebes,
the
Moluc-
cas
and
other
tshmds.
Without
bloodshed
or
unplcnstuiL
words.
East
Indonc.sia
nctnined
autonomy
la:;i
December
and
cstab'i^hcd
a
government
with
a
Council,
a
Presi:leu.
Hnci
a
cabinet.
The
first
elected
legislature
met
in
April,
'West
I3or:ico
is
only
one
or
foiii
divisions
of
thai
islaml.
It
bccatnc
solf-covernir.:-
in
June,
with
r.n
elected
Council.
E.i.sL
Borneo
navv
is
orgnnizing
its
own
fiee
government.
Central
Borneo
is
to
follow
in
a
few
weeks.
When
the
SuH.\n
gets
back,
these
UIILV
will
combin--'
to
form
the
Iree
Mate
of
Borneo.
But-*nnd
•
this
is
a
key
to
tlv*
whole
Indonesian
problem
as
these
spokesmen
see
it—neither
East
ln-
loncsia
nor
'Borneo
claim
to
be
in-
Irpcii'.icnt
nalicn.s.
They
think
of
themselves
as
two
of
the
free
states'
which,
together
wilh
the
Javunc.sc-
uinatran
"republic,"
will
make
up
the
niuioiuil
federation
ol
Indonesia.
ICach
area
has
the
privilege
oi
j:>inin£
one
of
these
three
or
-miiiK
its
own
government.
The
Uepublic.
on
the
other
naml.
considers
itself
a
nuion,
and
wan'.s
to
b?
rccogniy.ed
as
such,
and
when
the
U.
S.
of
Indonesia
i.s
formed
wants
lo
dominate
the
federation.
•Mcsl
of
the
Javanese
and
Su-
inalrans
would
prefer
to
take
their
freedom
peacefully
&s
we
did,
v.ndc.-
the
agreement
made
by
their
£ov-
crmncnl
wi'.li
the
I3uleh
last
October
nl
Linggadjati,"
;.ald
the
Sultan.
"I
liai-e
nu
doubt
that
the
Jap-
I
ane.se
slatted
the
trouble.
When
the
war
ended
many
of
them
dc-
'
sertt'd
the
occtipation
army
and
I
Joine<i
tip
with
the
Republicans
More
tlniii
SCO
of
them
have
be^'n
killed
by
the
Dutch.
They
had
s?t
activity
In
Mic
Rcpulillcan
fight
against
the
Dutch.
It
is
a
inatlfr
of
record,
however,
that
two
ixiwcrfiU
behlnd-lhc-si;ene5
Republican
leaders,
Allinin
and
Tau
Malaka,
aro
Moscov.'-lralned
Reds.
The
latter,
oxixilled
by
t!ie
Dutch
when
he
was
Comintern
representative
lor
the
Far
East,
returned
to
Java
during
the
Japanese
occupation.
The
Indonesians
are
very
bitter
because
the
Security
Council
will
not
hear
them.
"There
is
only
one
j;ood
name
for
what
went
on
then-,"
said
the
Sultan.
"It
was
a
Punch
and
•
Judy
show.
You
can't
call
it
justice.
•"We
wanted
to
let
them
know
that
the
Republic
docs
not
j-epresent
all
Indonesia,
Maybe,
we
are
wron;f
in
our
contention
that
all
states
should
b;
equal.
But
they
let
India
and
the
Philippines
sit
at
the
table.
Why
won't
they
even
hear
us?"
IIR1TTI
B
ItUNKS
BRKAK
Em-nest
Gardner,
youth
of
Buck-
inghamshire,
England,
by
the
time
he
reached
his
llith
birthday,
had
suffered
seven
breaks
of
his
left
arm,
six
fractures
of
his
right
arm,
a
fracture
or
the
collarbone,
and
a
fractured
left
leg,
all
due
to
brittle
bones.
up
a
Republic
of
Indonesia,
and
they
would
like
to
have
it
control
the
whole
area,
in
hope
Ihut
they
In
turn
can
control
it.
"But
the.
Dutch
arc
to
blam;\
loo.
They
look
it
for
granted
lli.it
we
would
follow
them
like
pupi>ets,
and
discovered
too
late
that
we
wouldn't."
None
of
Ihe
Inucncslans
would
discus:;
for
quotation
Communist
c••••••••••••••••••••••
f
:
Wanted
to
Buy
:
:
Highest
Prices
•
I
Paid
for
Used
;
•
Tractors
and
J
•
Equipment
I
:
Russell
Phillips
j
I
Tractor
Co.
•
•
So.
Highway
61
Phone
2I71«
Are
You
Planning
to
Move?
We
offer
you
this
piccn
of
equipment
designed
for
safe
transportation
in
all
types
of
weatlier.
Ample
Furniture
pads
and
other
equipment.
to
insure
sufe
handling.
24-Hour
Service
on
Notice
From
where
I
sit...
Joe
Marsh
Who
Really
Gets
Penalized?
GEMS
DENOTK
RANK
Precious
stones
of
different
colors
are
worn
by
the
various
ranks
of
Chinese
mandarins.
The
highest
rank
wears
a
red
ruuy
or
pink
tourmaline;
the
next
rnnV;
wears
garnet
or
coral;
the
tbird
rank
berry!
or
lapis
lazuli;
and
the
bottom
rank
white
rock,
crystal,
'or
other
stones.
Daws
0.
K.
Garage
120
Lilly
St.
General
Aulo
Hc'iiairing
Radiator
Cleaning
&
Repair
Painting
&
Hotly
Repair
Welding,
All
Types
All
Work
Guaranteed
Phone
805
For
Complete
Protection
Against
All
INSURABLE
HAZARDS
Phone
3545
W.
J.
POLLARD
AGENCY
Glencoe
Hotel
Bldg.
T24W.
Ash
St.
Just
been
reading
the
Pope
County
papers:
"Officers
In
Drive
lo
Slop
Transporting
I>iqunr
in
C'ounty;
County,
Township,
and
Oily
Forces
Team
Up
Kaitl;
Sheriff's
Ralll
Near
Hector
JVnt.s
Whiskey,
Sugar;
Jury
in
J.
V.
Court
Convicts
on
I.kpiur
Charge;
Twi>
Fined
$250
Eaeb
for
Fosses-
sins
Untn.veil
I.ii[iior."
These
nre
strange
headlines
to
come
out
of
a
"dry"
county.
But,
of
course,
Pope
County
inn't
actually
dry.
even
though
it
voted
foi-
"Prohibition"
several
years
ago.
And
so
instead
of
realizing
revenue
from
legal
sales,
the
county
is
spending
a
lot
of
money
trying
to
catch
bootleggers.
Everything
going
out
and
nothing
coming
in.
In
counties
where
beer
is
sold
legally,
part
of
tho
taxes
go
to
the
state's
crippled
children,
the
indigent
sick,
the
old
age
pensioners,
the
tuberculosis
patients,
the
public
school
fund.'
the
University,
the
teachers'
salary
fund.
In
"dry"
counties,
on'ly
the
bootlegger
benefits,
for
he
doesn't
pay
taxes.
Nor
does
he
bother
to
observe
any
of
the
restrictions
placed
on
licensed
dealers,
such
as
not
selling
to
minors
nor
on
Sundays.
The
bootlegger
wilt
sell
to
anybody,
any
time.
IT'S
A
SIMMK
la
discard
shoc-.s
which
only
need
»
^ood
repair
Job
10
Klve
lh«m
immy
more
iruh'-s
of
wear-ability.
Brlni;
them
here
nntl
l>c
njrmzctl
at
hov,'
little
we
charge
to
rcncw
worn
footwear,
HALTER'S
Quality
Shoe
Shop
For
Electric
We*
Call
2397
BOB'S
Electric
Shop
•
Farm
Wiring
•
House
Wiring
•
Motor
Repairs
•
Appliance
Installation
500
N.
Fifth
St.
niythtvillc,
Ark.
ARKANSAS
COMMITTEE,
UNITED
STATES
BREWERS
FOUNDATION
HACO
BOTO,
STATE
DIRECTOR
.
.
.
402
PYRAMID
BIOG.,
LITTLE
ROCK,
ARK.
•
Hold*
100
lh.
of
•
Burns,
any
kind
of
coal,
coke
or
briquet*.
•
Start
a
fire
but
once
a
year.
•
H
tats
a
without
refueling.
•
Your
hor»e
«
WAKM
every
MORN
I
NO.
Come
in.
Examine
iti
ex-
duMvc,patented
feature*.
Hubbard
Hardware
Co.
Hubbard
&
Hoke
Appliance
Co.
Hubbard
Furniture
Co.
•*i<>;>;>;>7*]>:>;>'yv>:vvv'»~vvv>>">">"vv>;vvv;yvvvvvv>'V'«"*
i
'»''#"*"*'v>"*":+
HAIRY
VETCHj
Balboa
;iml
Common
Hyc,
Oals,
Whc:i{
and
Hurley
$
Seed
.
.
.
Ready
for
Fall
Heeding
!•!
New
and
Factory
Reconditioned
Soybean
Sacks
>;
Blythevilie
Soybean
Corp.
i
1880
W.
Main
I'honc
856-57
•
LINCOLN
MERCURY
OWNERS
DIRT
FOR
SALE
Pride
Phone
517
SALE
Concrete
Building
Blocks
Aquella
Water
Proofing
Point
12-
48
inch
CONCRETE
CULVERTS
plain
or
reinforced
Osceola
Tile
and
CULVERT
CO.
We
Deliver
Phone
691
a«
--W-*
&»<
New
soles?
.
.
.
new
licels?
.
.
.
new
loccs?
.
.
.
V,VII
do
everything
that's
needed
to
'lovs
your
children's
shoei
ready
for
FIRST
DAY
OF
SCHOOL.
HALFORD'S
SHOE
SHOP
106
So.
Second
St.
fO*
K£At
MtKCURy
SIRVICt
ALWAYS
Satisfied
customers
:uc
what
it
'
takes
to
make
:\
business
grow.
We
have
u
lot
of
diem—because
we
give
Lincoln
and
Mercury
owners
the
kind
of
service
they
have
every
reason
to
expect
"!
.
.
.
service
that's
better,
finer,
more
more
fricrids
all
the
time!
STILL
&
YOUNG
MOTOR
CO
Phone
3479
112
Walnut
St.
,
4
IT'S
OUR
WAY
0V
MAKING
FRIENDS
—
saving
of
time
and
money.
Why
not
make
it
a
point
to
come
in
and
visit
us
soon?
You'll
sec
in
a
minute
why
our
service
is
the
kind
of
service
that
keeps
on
making
Still
&
Young
Motor
Co.
Lincoln-Mercury
Dealer
Phone
347D
Blythevilie
Ark.
112
\Va)nut
St.
KEROSENE
&
FUEL
OIL
CALL
2089
•Th«
Old
Reliable"
G.
O.
POETZ
»
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.r
PETROLEUM
lJ^5ni«to.
PRODUCrS
one*
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at